Abstract

A geochronologic study of blueschists from west-central Baja California has provided constraints on the timing of high-pressure, low-temperature metamorphism and the subsequent uplift of this subduction complex. Mineral separates from coherent blueschists and blueschist blocks enclosed in serpentinite melange were analyzed by {sup 40}Ar/{sup 39}Ar, fission track, and Rb/Sr methods. {sup 40}Ar/{sup 39}Ar age spectra for white mica separated from four blueschist blocks and an overprinted eclogite block in serpentinite-matrix melange show slow cooling gradients between 115-95 Ma. Rb/Sr apparent ages for one block are concordant with these results. {sup 40}Ar/{sup 39}Ar ages of blue amphibole are primarily the result of the degassing of white mica intergrowths as confirmed by microprobe analyses. Apatite fission track ages indicate a blueschist block and an eclogite block cooled to a temperature below {approximately}100 C at 22 Ma and 32 Ma, respectively. Subduction-related metamorphism of the coherent blueschists occurred in late Early Cretaceous time, based on a {sup 40}Ar/{sup 39}Ar age or 109 Ma for metamorphic white mica from a metasandstone. {sup 40}Ar/{sup 39}Ar analysis of partially albitized K-feldspar from a plutonic clast in a metaconglomerate indicates this sample cooled to a temperature of {approximately} 145 C at approximately 20 Ma. Geochronologic and petrologicmore » data for coherent blueschists indicate an average uplift rate of 0.1 mm/yr for one portion of the subduction complex. The relatively slow uplift rate and lack of any higher temperature overprinting assemblages in the coherent blueschists suggest that synsubduction uplift was gradual and proceeded through a dynamic accretionary wedge characterized by low geothermal gradients. An increase in uplift rate (to 1.0 mm/yr) during post-Miocene time coincides with a change from a convergent to a transform plate boundary.« less

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